Electrical answering service · Mission, TX

AI Receptionist for Electrical Contractors in Mission, Texas

Mission sits at the western edge of the McAllen metro, split by Expressway 83 and anchored by the Anzalduas International Bridge. When a homeowner in Sharyland loses half their power at 8pm or a property manager in Cimarron needs a panel upgrade quoted, the call goes to whoever picks up first. If you are running service trucks across Hidalgo County and miss the call, the job books with someone else before you finish the current pull.

Narlo answers your missed calls via SMS within 10 seconds, qualifies the job, and books it into Jobber or Housecall Pro. The replies sound like your dispatcher, not a chatbot. You pay $40 per booked appointment, nothing if no booking. Turn missed calls into booked jobs.

Why Mission electrical shops lose calls

Panel-upgrade calls across North Mission during storm season

Tropical storm season runs June through November across the Rio Grande Valley, and Hurricane Hanna in 2020 showed how fast partial-power calls flood from older North Mission and Bryan Road neighborhoods. A homeowner calls three shops; the first to reply with a firm quote and a time slot books the panel work. If your truck is finishing a generator tie-in near Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park when the call comes in, you lose the quote window in Sharyland or Peñitas. Narlo replies within 10 seconds from Mission or Alton addresses, asks whether breakers are tripping or power is out completely, and books a site-visit slot in your CRM. The job lands in Jobber before the second missed ring, whether the caller is in North Mission or across Expressway 83 in Cimarron.

EV-charger quote requests along FM 495 and South Mission subdivisions

EV charger installs are scheduled work with permit requirements tied to AEP Texas service and Hidalgo CAD inspections across South Mission and Madero subdivisions. Homeowners along FM 495 and near Highway 107 call multiple electricians for load-calc quotes and timeline estimates. If you are stuck in I-2 traffic near the Anzalduas bridge when the call comes in from a South Mission address, the job books with the contractor who texts back first. Narlo qualifies the charger type, asks about existing panel capacity in the Madero home, and books the site visit into Housecall Pro. The homeowner in South Mission gets a reply before they dial the second number, and you own the quote appointment whether you are finishing recessed lighting in Alton or wrapping a service call in Palmview.

After-hours no-power calls across McAllen and Palmview service zones

A 1–10 truck electrical shop covering Mission, McAllen, Palmview, and Alton along I-2 and Expressway 83 takes emergency calls until 10 or 11pm. A no-power call at 9:30pm from a Palmview homeowner near FM 495 goes to voicemail if you are troubleshooting a breaker trip in Sharyland, and the homeowner scrolls to the next result. Narlo replies within 10 seconds to the Palmview address, asks whether the AEP Texas meter is spinning and whether breakers have tripped, and books the emergency-service slot into Jobber at your after-hours rate. The McAllen or Alton caller sees a reply before they finish typing the search for the next shop, and the call converts while you finish the current job in North Mission or near Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park.

Post-freeze panel failures across RGV from Feb 2021 event

The February 2021 freeze caused catastrophic water-pipe bursts across Mission, Sharyland, and Cimarron, and many homes had panel corrosion or breaker damage from water intrusion. Three years later, homeowners in the Bryan Road area or South Mission still discover failed breakers during remodels. These calls from North Mission or Madero are quote-driven and price-sensitive; the homeowner calls four or five contractors and books the one who replies first with a clear scope. If you are finishing a code-compliance inspection for Mission Public Utilities in Alton or driving Expressway 83 back from a permitted panel swap in Peñitas when the Sharyland call comes in, you lose the quote window. Narlo qualifies the breaker count, asks about water damage in the Cimarron home, captures the address near FM 495, and books the quote visit into your CRM before the homeowner finishes the third call.

Book a demo for your Mission shop

We'll show you exactly how Narlo answers a missed call, qualifies the job, and books it into Jobber or Housecall Pro. $40 per booked appointment, nothing if no booking.

  • · Replies in 10 seconds, sounds like your dispatcher
  • · Books directly into your CRM
  • · No monthly fee, no per-text charge

Mission Electrical owner FAQ

What does Narlo cost?+

You pay $40 per booked appointment. If Narlo qualifies the caller but the job does not book—wrong service area, caller hung up, not a real lead—you pay nothing if no booking. No monthly retainer, no per-message fee, no contract. You pay only when a qualified electrical job lands in your Jobber or Housecall Pro calendar with a firm time slot. A panel-upgrade quote in Sharyland that books on Tuesday morning costs $40. A no-power call at 9pm in Palmview that books an emergency visit costs $40. A spam call or a price-shopper who will not commit costs nothing.

How does Narlo integrate with my CRM?+

Narlo books directly into Jobber or Housecall Pro. When the SMS exchange qualifies the job and the caller agrees to a time slot, Narlo writes the appointment into your CRM with the service type, address, phone number, and notes. You see the booked job on your dispatch board immediately. If you use Jobber, the EV-charger quote in South Mission appears as a scheduled visit with the homeowner's load-panel details in the notes field. If you use Housecall Pro, the breaker-trip call from North Mission appears as an emergency appointment with the breaker-panel symptoms captured. No re-entry, no phone tag, no missed detail.

Does Narlo handle calls across the entire Rio Grande Valley service area?+

Yes. A Mission-based electrical shop typically covers McAllen, Alton, Palmview, Sharyland, Cimarron, and Peñitas—roughly a 15-mile radius along I-2 and Expressway 83. Narlo asks the caller from South Mission or the Bryan Road area for their address during the SMS exchange and confirms it falls within your service zone before booking. If a caller from Edinburg is outside your range, Narlo does not book the job and you pay nothing. The system knows your FM 495 and Highway 107 coverage boundaries and will not commit you to a panel-upgrade quote in a city you do not cover. After-hours calls from Madero, North Mission, or near Anzalduas International Bridge book automatically if the address is inside your Mission Public Utilities or AEP Texas service territory, and you control the radius while Narlo enforces it in every reply.